nowty wrote: ↑Tue Sep 27, 2022 7:41 pm
sharpener wrote: ↑Tue Sep 27, 2022 6:31 pm
WPD were very risk averse and insisted on a full long-form G99 application, with my 5 kVA Victron turned down to 3.68 kW max inverter power and G100 export limitation to a total of 3.68 kW for everything - including the 3.68kW of my original PV. Depends on the locality I suppose but I am only 100m from the s/station, what do they use, wet string?
Your post about this on another thread really threw me.
The bit about the DNO insisting on a max PV of 3.68kW attached to the Victron (as well as a 3.68kW output limit). But I later read that Victron has something called the "The Factor 1.0 rule" which may explain it but it's the first practical intervention on the DC side by a DNO I have heard about.
https://www.victronenergy.com/live/ac_coupling:start
It's more complicated than that. The "1:1 rule" is a red herring, it is there to ensure that PV connected on the
AC-Out side of a Victron has somewhere to go in the first 20ms in the event of a power cut (over a few seconds the Victron will then increase the system frequency to shut the PV inverter down). Control of the DC side is different,
I don't have any at present* but it is where the new panels will go, they will have an MPPT charge controller which the inverter can shut down over the LAN.
* Edit: emphasis added, I think this may be where the original misunderstanding is. I see Andy has posted along similar lines while I was writing this.
In my case the DNO should not care what I have attached to the back of the Victron because everything it does or does not export comes out of the front. This lack of understanding is not helped by the fact that none of the installation examples in the IET Code of Practice shows the type of inverter that has separate input and output ports (even though there was a Victron rep on the list of consultees).
They have got confused between 3 different 3.68 kW limits:
#1 The existing PV - which is attached to the back of the Victron so they cannot see it at all.
#2 The power rating of the Victron in inverter mode - which is 5kVA, but only 4kW real power anyway. This is the power that comes from the battery and goes out the back into my consumer unit, it is only additive with #1 in the sense they are both available to power my loads. They want me to turn it down to 3.68 which is not much of a sacrifice but if I had wanted the 8kVA model it would have been a problem.
#3 What the Victron can actually export out of the front to the grid, which is the only thing IMO which they have a legitimate concern about, this is subject to the G100 Export Limiting Scheme which is configured quite separately from #2.
Kenny000666 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 27, 2022 8:08 pm
It is UKPN
Loads of houses in my area have installed EV chargers, and as I understand it they run at 7kw for hours. Not sure why DNOs make a big fuss over a possible export of 6.68kw.
Yes, it is of course complete and utter nonsense. If I have the cooker turned
nearly full on, and then I put another ring on and the 40A mcb trips, the resulting load step is exactly the same as if I decide to export 9.6kW all of a sudden.
How can the DNO distinguish between these two scenarios? For a given supply source impedance they will both result in identical steps in the line voltage which is the thing they say they are most concerned about.